Contents :
Document Lifecycle Tutorial IETF 70 Vancouver Canada 2 December 2007 Overview of This Tutorial 1. Where do RFCs come from 2. Writing an Internet Draft Things to think about before writing your draft Contents of an Internet-Draft 3. The lifecycle from Internet-Draft to RFC 4. Common questions and where to look for more information 2 December 2007 Document Lifecycle Tutorial 2 1. Where do RFCs come from 4 document streams as defined in RFC 4844: 1. IETF Working Group AD-sponsored (aka Individual) 2. 3. 4. IAB IRTF RFC Editor (Independent Submission) 2 December 2007 Document Lifecycle Tutorial 3 Streams in Relation to Categories As described in RFC 3932: IETF WG to Standards Track: Includes WG consensus review in the IETF IETF Last Call and IESG approval IETF WG to Experimental/Informational: Includes WG consensus IETF review in the IETF and IESG approval AD sponsored to Standards Track: Includes review in the IETF IETF IETF Last Call and IESG approval AD sponsored Individual to Experimental/Informational: Includes IETF some form of review in the IETF and IESG approval IAB / IRTF Documents for which special rules exist RFC Editor documents to Experimental/Informational RFC Editor IETF 2 December 2007 Document Lifecycle Tutorial 4 RFC Categories RFC 2026 defines specification maturity levels: Standards track: Proposed Draft Standard. Non-standards track: Experimental Informational Historic. "Almost standard": Best Current Practice. Except one category "Standards Track" for PS DS S. Often called "status". Shown on RFC header as "Category:" A published RFC can NEVER change but its category can change (see rfc-index.txt). 2 December 2007 Document Lifecycle Tutorial 5
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- Verified : 2013-03-22
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